Beschreibungen

This second volume of a new three-part series of Antonio Negri's work is focussed on the consequences of the rapid process of deindustrialisation that has occurred across the West in recent years.In this volume Negri investigates exactly what happens when the class subjects of industrial capitalism are demobilised and the factories close. Evidently capital continues to make profit, but how and where? According to Negri, the creation of value extends beyond the factory walls to embrace the whole of society; the 'mass worker' of industrialism gives way to the 'socialised worker' (operaio sociale) and the terrain of exploitation now becomes the whole of human life. In postmodernity, the metropolis becomes the privileged arena of value extraction. We must therefore understand the global city, with its stratifications, its enclosures and its resistances. Old categories of the private and the public are inadequate to describe the new matrix of production, which is characterised rather by the 'common', the productive space of cognitive and immaterial labour. Today's metropolis can be defined as a space of antagonisms between forms of life produced, on the one hand, by finance capital (the capital that operates around rents), and on the other by the 'cognitive proletariat'. The central question is then how 'the common' of the latter can be mobilised for the destruction of capitalism.In an analysis that runs from the Italian workerism (operaismo) of the 1970s to the present day, From the Factory to the Metropolis offers readers valuable insight into the far-reaching impact of deindustrialisation, presenting both the challenges and opportunities. It will appeal to the many interested in the continuing development of Negri's project and to anyone interested in radical politics today.

Preface Part I. Exodus from the factory 1. The reappropriation of public space 2. Midway terrains 3. The multitude and the metropolis: Notes in the form of hypotheses for an inquiry into the precariat in the global cities 4. Exiting from industrial capitalism 5. From the factory to the metropolis 6. Metropolis and multitude: Inquiry notes on precarity in global cities Part II. Inventing common 7. Banlieue and city: A philosophical overview Co-written with the late Jean-Marie Vincent 8. Democracy versus rent 9. Presentation of Rem Koolhaas’s Junkspace 10. The capital-labour relation in cognitive capitalism Co-written with Carlo Vercellone 11. Inventing the commons of humanity Co-written with Judith Revel 12. The Commune of social cooperation: Interview with Federico Tomasello on questions regarding the metropolis 13. The common lung of the metropolis: Interview with Federico Tomasello 14. The habitat of general intellect: A dialogue between Antonio Negri and Federico Tomasello on living in the contemporary metropolis Part III. First fruits of the new metropolis 15. Reflections on the Manifesto for an Accelerationist Politics 16. Notes on the abstract strike 17. From the factory to the metropolis ... and back again Origin of the Texts